Browsing NTNU Open by Author "Hawthorn, Jeremy"
Now showing items 1-11 of 11
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Blank Spaces and Hollow Men: Determinate Absences and Absent Determinants in Conrad’s Fiction
Hawthorn, Jeremy (Journal article, 2018) -
Conradian Claustrophobia: Gender, Confinement, Emancipation
Hawthorn, Jeremy (Journal article, 2017)This article discusses the ways in which space is gendered in a number of Conrad's fictions, with a particular focus on those spaces experienced as metaphorically or literally claustrophobic and stifling. First two shorter ... -
Ernest Bramah and Two Novels by George Orwell
Hawthorn, Jeremy (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2018) -
The Expression "roulé ma bosse" in Joseph Conrad's "Lord Jim"
Hawthorn, Jeremy (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2020) -
History, Fiction, and the Holocaust: Narrative Perspective and Ethical Responsibility
Hawthorn, Jeremy (Journal article, 2019) -
J. B. Pinker and the Pseudonymous Publication of "The Nature of a Crime"
Hawthorn, Jeremy (Journal article, 2017) -
Joseph Conrad’s Guys and Dolls (and Scarecrows and Dummies)
Hawthorn, Jeremy (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2023) -
Probing Privacy in Political Contexts: Secrecy, Identity, and Integrity in the Work of Michael Frayn
Antonsen, Katrine (Doctoral theses at NTNU;2018:120, Doctoral thesis, 2018)Doktorgradsavhandlingen Probing Privacy in Political Contexts: Secrecy, Identity, and Integrity in the Work of Michael Frayn, undersøker hvordan utvalgte romaner og skuespill av den britiske forfatteren Michael Frayn (1933 ... -
Real-world generalizations in Conrad's third-person narratives
Hawthorn, Jeremy (Journal article, 2018)And Captain MacWhirr wrote home from the coast of China twelve times every year, desiring quaintly to be “remembered to the children,” and subscribing himself “your loving husband,” as calmly as if the words so long used ... -
Review of Werner Senn, "Conrad's Narrative Voice: Stylistic Aspects of his Fiction"
Hawthorn, Jeremy (Journal article, 2017) -
W. G. Sebald and Joseph Conrad's 'Swiss Governess'
Hawthorn, Jeremy (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017)The fifth section of W. G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn opens with the author’s description of having fallen asleep while watching a documentary about Roger Casement on BBC television. On wakening, all that Sebald can ...